Orlando Sentinel

Pruitt said to demand extra security on first day at EPA

Inspector general appears to counter aides’ prior claims

- By Michael Biesecker

WASHINGTON — An internal watchdog at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency said Monday that Administra­tor Scott Pruitt demanded and received unpreceden­ted, around the-clock protection from armed officers on his first day — a detail that appears at odds with past claims that the stepped-up security measures came in direct response to death threats.

EPA Inspector General Arthur Elkins said in letters to Democratic senators that Pruitt himself initiated the 24-hour-a day protection, which far exceeds the part-time security afforded to past EPA administra­tors.

Elkins’ letter comes after Pruitt cited an August 2017 report by a staffer in the inspector general’s office detailing more than a dozen investigat­ions of threats against him and his Obama administra­tion predecesso­r as justificat­ion for stepped-up security measures, which has included flying first class on commercial airliners.

Elkins said that 2017 summary was requested by Pruitt’s office and was not intended to justify tighter security. Marked “For Official Use Only,” the internal summary was then improperly made public, Elkins said.

“The (Office of Inspector General) is not a decision maker for EPA,” Elkins wrote, adding that Pruitt’s staff began pushing for his office to assess threats against Pruitt within days of his arrival in Washington. “The OIG declined and informed EPA management that it is not the role of the OIG to provide a threat assessment, but rather the OIG is limited to the role of investigat­ing and reporting back the facts.”

The Associated Press reported last month that Pruitt’s preoccupat­ion with his safety came at a steep cost to taxpayers, as his swollen security detail blew through overtime budgets and at times diverted officers away from investigat­ing environmen­tal crimes. Altogether, the agency has spent about $3 million on Pruitt’s 20member full-time security detail, which is more than three times the size of his predecesso­r’s part-time security contingent.

Pruitt has faced a steady trickle of revelation­s involving pricey trips in firstclass seats and unusual security spending, including a $43,000 soundproof booth for making private phone calls. Pruitt is also under fire for substantia­l raises afforded to two young staffers he brought with him from Oklahoma, where he previously served as a Republican state attorney general.

President Donald Trump said last week he still has confidence in Pruitt even as criticism of his EPA chief has increasing­ly been coming from fellow Republican­s.

In testimony before two House subcommitt­ees last month, Pruitt sought to put the blame for any missteps on his subordinat­es, saying that his security team decided he should fly in first class and that his chief of staff approved the questionab­le raises.

Pruitt repeated the claim that the extraordin­ary spending on his personal security was needed because the threats against him have been “unpreceden­ted in terms of quantity and type.” He then read aloud a threat posted on Twitter last year by a man who said he planned to shoot Pruitt and who was later determined by investigat­ors to be in India.

On Wednesday, Pruitt is set to testify before a Senate committee where he is likely to face another round of sharp questions about his administra­tion of the federal environmen­tal agency. EPA’s inspector general and congressio­nal committees are now conducting about a dozen investigat­ions into actions by Pruitt and his closest aides.

EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox repeated the assertion Monday that EPA security staff, not Pruitt, made the decision to increase his security.

Pruitt’s security chief, Pasquale Perrotta, announced his retirement from EPA this month after questions arose about whether he improperly recommende­d a business partner for a federal contract and outside work he performed as a private investigat­or for a tabloid newspaper.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? A security detail surrounds EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, center, as he walks to a budget hearing in April.
ALEX BRANDON/AP A security detail surrounds EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, center, as he walks to a budget hearing in April.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States